This study examines the significance of interactions between German prisoners of war and their American captors during World War II. It uses government documents, personal accounts, and newspaper articles to reconstruct various aspects of life in Camp Crossville, Tennessee, as a representative of the national camp system. It also examines the recollections of former prisoners, guards, and Crossville residents to assess the impressions created by prisoner-captor interactions. These sources demonstrate that camp life created a generally positive impression among both the Germans and the Americans at Camp Crossville. The POW s attempted to use their time in captivity constructively, and their interactions with Americans were usually amiable. W...
This dissertation is a genealogy of the geographical and technological practices that shaped the spa...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 106-112)In April of 1945, members of the United States Ar...
This study examines the congressional mission to liberated concentration camps in April and May 1945...
The United States held almost 500,000 enemy combatants within her borders during World War II. Out ...
This dissertation examines wartime experiences of German and Italian prisoners of war (POWs) on the ...
Studies of prisoners of war in America have received renewed attention since the opening of the pris...
The McNair Scholars Program prepares undergraduate students for graduate studies by providing opport...
The purpose of this study is to examine and evaluate the development of prisoner of war administrati...
Few people realize that during World War II, Camp Shelby in south Mississippi was a detention site f...
This article investigates the efforts made to protect prisoners of war (POWs) in German hands at the...
This article describes the life of German prisoners of war as recorded in oral histories by the men ...
During WWII the US government housed German POWs at a camp in Denson, Arkansas that it had previousl...
In war memory, the typical prisoner of war narrative is one of either passive survival or heroic res...
ii This dissertation examines the captivity of the American soldier during the American Civil War (1...
Fifty years after the arrival of German prisoners of war in Florida their story is still little know...
This dissertation is a genealogy of the geographical and technological practices that shaped the spa...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 106-112)In April of 1945, members of the United States Ar...
This study examines the congressional mission to liberated concentration camps in April and May 1945...
The United States held almost 500,000 enemy combatants within her borders during World War II. Out ...
This dissertation examines wartime experiences of German and Italian prisoners of war (POWs) on the ...
Studies of prisoners of war in America have received renewed attention since the opening of the pris...
The McNair Scholars Program prepares undergraduate students for graduate studies by providing opport...
The purpose of this study is to examine and evaluate the development of prisoner of war administrati...
Few people realize that during World War II, Camp Shelby in south Mississippi was a detention site f...
This article investigates the efforts made to protect prisoners of war (POWs) in German hands at the...
This article describes the life of German prisoners of war as recorded in oral histories by the men ...
During WWII the US government housed German POWs at a camp in Denson, Arkansas that it had previousl...
In war memory, the typical prisoner of war narrative is one of either passive survival or heroic res...
ii This dissertation examines the captivity of the American soldier during the American Civil War (1...
Fifty years after the arrival of German prisoners of war in Florida their story is still little know...
This dissertation is a genealogy of the geographical and technological practices that shaped the spa...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 106-112)In April of 1945, members of the United States Ar...
This study examines the congressional mission to liberated concentration camps in April and May 1945...